Every Sunday, we gather to worship, learn, and serve.
But God’s work does not stop inside the church. He is moving across cities, campuses, communities, and nations—and He invites all of us to take part.
This site helps you discover what God is doing through GCF missionaries and mission partners. Here you can:
See where they serve
Gain access to their stories and updates
Know how to pray
Find ways to partner
Whether you are just beginning to explore missions or have been supporting it for years, this space is here to help you connect, pray, and respond.
GCF Missions exists to help our church obey God’s call to make disciples of all nations.
We send, support, and care for missionaries who serve in different places and among different people groups, both in the Philippines and around the world. We also work with mission partners and networks to strengthen churches, reach the unreached, and train believers to live out the gospel.
Through GCF Missions, our church is involved in:
Mobilizing members to pray, give, and go
Equipping people through training and short-term missions
Sending and caring for missionaries in the field
GCF Missions is not just a ministry. It is how we live out our calling to love God, love people, and make Christ known everywhere He leads us.
Church support keeps missionaries sent. Partnership keeps them sustained.
Financial support answers the practical need. Partnership answers the human one.
Missionaries face isolation, spiritual pressure, cultural fatigue, and unseen battles. Prayer, encouragement, communication, and genuine care remind them they are not forgotten.
In the New Testament, churches didn’t just give—they shared life and mission. Paul called the Philippians “partners in the gospel” (Philippians 1:5). He rejoiced not only in their gift, but in their concern (Philippians 4:10–17).
Partnership reflects the body of Christ. “When one part suffers, every part suffers with it” (1 Corinthians 12:26).
Support sends.
Partnership sustains.
Partnership goes beyond giving. It is shared obedience, shared care, and shared mission.
Pray intentionally and consistently.
Prayer is not symbolic support; it is frontline work. When churches pray, missionaries are strengthened against spiritual opposition and discouragement. Paul repeatedly asked churches to strive with him in prayer (Romans 15:30).
Build real relationships.
Learn their names, stories, families, and struggles. Send messages, ask thoughtful questions, remember birthdays, and celebrate milestones. Paul valued presence and concern as much as provision, calling the Philippians “partners in the gospel” (Philippians 1:5).
Encourage and care practically.
Care packages, handwritten notes, regular check-ins, and counseling support speak life. These small acts remind missionaries they are seen and valued.
Share the mission with others.
Advocate for missionaries. Share updates in growth groups. Help others pray intelligently and give joyfully.
Join in suffering and joy.
Partnership means we don’t look away from hardship or success. “If one part suffers, every part suffers with it” (1 Corinthians 12:26).